Browse HTS Tariff Lines
Explore all 13,855 US Harmonized Tariff Schedule tariff lines
13,855 tariff lines
| HTS Number | Description | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 9903.81.90 | Except as provided in heading 9903.81.92, derivative iron or steel products provided for in the tariff subheadings enumerated in subdivision (m) of note 16 to this subchapter. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 50%. |
| 9903.81.91 | Except as provided in heading 9903.81.92, derivative iron or steel products provided for in the tariff subheadings enumerated in subdivision (n) of note 16 to this subchapter. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + a duty of 50% upon the value of the steel content. |
| 9903.81.92 | Derivative iron or steel products provided for in the tariff subheadings enumerated in subdivision subdivisions (m), (n), (t) or (u) of note 16 to this subchapter, where the derivative iron or steel product was processed in another country from steel articles that were melted and poured in the United States. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading. |
| 9903.81.93 | Except as provided in headings 9903.81.91 or 9903.81.92, derivative products of iron or steel, as specified in subdivisions (l) and (m) of note 16 to this subchapter, admitted to a U.S. foreign trade zone under ‘‘privileged foreign status’’ as defined by 19 CFR 146.41, prior to 12:01 a.m. eastern daylight time on June 4, 2025. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 50%. |
| 9903.81.94 | Except for derivative iron or steel products described in headings 9903.81.96, 9903.81.97 or 9903.81.98, products of iron or steel of the United Kingdom provided for in the tariff headings or subheadings enumerated in subdivision (q) of note 16 to this subchapter | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 25% |
| 9903.81.95 | Products of iron or steel of the United Kingdom provided for in the tariff headings or subheadings enumerated in subdivision (q) of note 16 to this subchapter, admitted to a U.S. foreign trade zone under “privileged foreign status” as defined by 19 CFR 146.41, prior to 12:01 a.m. eastern daylight time on June 4, 2025 | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 25% |
| 9903.81.96 | Derivative iron or steel products of the United Kingdom provided for in the tariff subheadings enumerated in subdivision (s) of note 16 to this subchapter | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 25% |
| 9903.81.97 | Except as provided in heading 9903.81.92, derivative iron or steel products of the United Kingdom provided for in the tariff subheadings enumerated in subdivision (t) of note 16 to this subchapter | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 25% |
| 9903.81.98 | Except as provided in heading 9903.81.92, derivative iron or steel products of the United Kingdom provided for in the tariff subheadings enumerated in subdivision (u) of note 16 to this subchapter | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 25% |
| 9903.81.99 | Except as provided in headings 9903.81.98 or 9903.81.92, derivative products of iron or steel of the United Kingdom, as specified in subdivisions (s) and (t) of note 16 to this subchapter, admitted to a U.S.foreign trade zone under ‘‘privileged foreign status’’ as defined by 19 CFR 146.41, prior to 12:01 a.m. eastern daylight time on June 4, 2025 | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 25% |
| 9903.85.01 | Except for products described in heading 9903.85.03 or heading 9903.85.21, 9903.85.25, subheadings 9903.85.27 through 9903.85.44 and subheadings 9903.85.50 through 9903.85.66, products of aluminum provided for in the tariff headings or subheadings enumerated in note 19 to this subchapter, except products of Argentina, of Australia, of Canada, of Mexico (except as specified in subdivision (a)(viii) of such U.S. note 19), of member countries of the European Union specified in subdivision (a)(v) of such U.S. note 19, under any limitations that may be established by the Department of Commerce under such U.S. note 19; or any exclusions that may be determined and announced by the Department of Commerce | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 10% |
| 9903.85.02 | Except as provided in headings 9903.85.67 or 9903.85.69, products of aluminum provided for in the tariff headings or subheadings enumerated in subdivision (g) of note 19 to this subchapter. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 50%. |
| 9903.85.03 | Derivative aluminum products enumerated in U.S. note 19(a)(iii) to this subchapter, except products of Argentina, of Australia, of Canada, of Mexico (except as specified in subdivision (a)(ix) of such U.S. note 19), of member countries of the European Union (as enumerated in U.S. note 19(a)(v) to this subchapter or of the United Kingdom any exclusions that may be determined and announced by the Department of Commerce | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 10% |
| 9903.85.04 | Except as provided in headings 9903.85.68 or 9903.85.70, derivative aluminum products provided for in the tariff headings or subheadings enumerated in subdivision (i) of note 19 to this subchapter. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 50%. |
| 9903.85.05 | Unwrought aluminum, provided for in heading 7601 | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.06 | Wrought aluminum, provided for in headings 7604, 7605, 7606, 7607, 7608, 7609 and castings and forgings of aluminum provided for in subheading 7616.99.51 | The duty provided for in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.07 | Except as provided in headings 9903.85.09, 9903.85.68 or 9903.85.70, derivative aluminum products, provided for in the tariff provisions enumerated in subdivision (j) of note 19 to this subchapter. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 50%. |
| 9903.85.08 | Except as provided in heading 9903.85.09, 9903.85.68 or 9903.85.70, derivative aluminum products, provided for in the tariff provisions enumerated in subdivision (k) of note 19 to this subchapter. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + a duty of 50% upon the value of the aluminum content. |
| 9903.85.09 | Except as provided in heading 9903.85.68 or 9903.85.70, derivative aluminum products provided for in the tariff headings and subheadings enumerated in subdivisions (j), (k), (r) or (s) of note 19 to this subchapter, where the derivative aluminum products were processed in another country from aluminum articles that were smelted and cast in the United States. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading. |
| 9903.85.11 | Goods granted relief from the application of quantitative limitation otherwise imposed in relation to subheadings 9903.85.05 and 9903.85.06, for any aluminum article determined by the Secretary not to be produced in the United States in a sufficient and reasonably available amount, or of a satisfactory quality, or for specific national security reasons, provided that such goods shall be counted toward any quantitative limitation proclaimed by the President until such limitation has filled | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.12 | Except as provided in headings 9903.85.67 or 9903.85.69, products of aluminum of the United Kingdom provided for in the tariff headings or subheadings enumerated in subdivision (o) of note 19 to this subchapter | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 25% |
| 9903.85.13 | Except as provided in headings 9903.85.68 or 9903.85.70, derivative aluminum products of the United Kingdom provided for in the tariff headings or subheadings enumerated in subdivision (q) of note 19 to this subchapter | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 25% |
| 9903.85.14 | Except as provided in headings 9903.85.09, 9903.85.68 or 9903.85.70, derivative aluminum products of the United Kingdom, provided for in the tariff provisions enumerated in subdivision (r) of note 19 to thissubchapter | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 25% |
| 9903.85.15 | Except as provided in heading 9903.85.09, 9903.85.68 or 9903.85.70, derivative aluminum products, provided for in the tariff provisions enumerated in subdivision (s) of note 19 to this subchapter | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + a duty of 25% upon the value of the aluminum content |
| 9903.85.21 | Aluminum products of Canada enumerated in U.S. note 19(a)(iv) to this subchapter | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 10% |
| 9903.85.25 | Aluminum products of member countries of the European Union enumerated in U.S. note 19(a)(v) to this subchapter, when such products are covered by an exclusion granted by the Secretary of Commerce under note 19(c) to this subchapter, provided that such goods shall be counted toward any quantitative limitation applicable to any such product until such limitation has filled. | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.27 | Unwrought aluminum, not alloyed (provided for in subheading 7601.10.30 or 7601.10.60) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.29 | Other unwrought products, alloyed (provided for in subheading 7601.20.30, 7601.20.60 or 7601.20.90) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.31 | Bars, rods and profiles of aluminum, not alloyed (provided for in subheading 7604.10.10, 7604.10.30 or 7604.10.50) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.32 | Hollow profiles of aluminum alloys (provided for in subheading 7604.21.00) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.33 | Bars, rods, and solid profiles, alloyed (provided for in subheading 7604.29.10, 7604.29.30 or 7604.29.50) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.34 | Wire of aluminum, of which the maximum cross-sectional dimension exceeds 7 mm (provided for in subheading 7605.11.00 or 7605.21.00) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.35 | Other wire of aluminum (provided for in subheading 7605.19.00 or 7605.29.00) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.36 | Products meeting the requirements of note 1(d) to this chapter and with a thickness of more than 6.3 mm (described in statistical reporting number 7606.11.3030, 7606.12.3015, 7606.12.3025, 7606.12.3035, 7606.91.3055, 7606.91.6055, 7606.92.3025 or 7606.92.6055) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.37 | Products meeting the requirements of note1(d) to this chapter and with a thickness not exceeding 6.3 mm (described in statistical reporting number 7606.11.3060, 7606.12.3091, 7606.12.3096, 7606.91.3095, 7606.91.6095, 7606.92.3035 or 7606.92.6095), and clad products (described in statistical reporting number 7606.11.6000 or 7606.12.6000) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.38 | Aluminum alloy can stock (described in statistical reporting number 7606.12.3045 or 7606.12.3055) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.39 | Aluminum foil, not backed (described in statistical reporting number 7607.11.3000, 7607.11.6010, 7607.11.6090, 7607.11.9030, 7607.11.9060, 7607.11.9090, 7607.19.1000, 7607.19.3000 or 7607.19.6000) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.40 | Aluminum foil, backed (described in statistical reporting number 7607.20.1000 or 7607.20.5000) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.41 | Pipes and tubes of aluminum, seamless (described in statistical reporting number 7608.10.0030 or 7608.20.0030) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.42 | Pipes and tubes of aluminum, other than seamless (described in statistical reporting number 7608.10.0090 or 7608.20.0090) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.43 | Tube or pipe fittings of aluminum (for example, couplings, elbows, sleeves) (described in statistical reporting number 7609.00.0000) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.44 | Castings or forgings of aluminum (described in statistical reporting number 7616.99.5160 or 7616.99.5170) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.50 | Aluminum products of the United Kingdom, when such products are covered by an exclusion granted by the Secretary of Commerce under note 19(c) to this subchapter, provided that such goods shall be counted toward any quantitative limitation applicable to any such product until such limitation has filled | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.51 | Unwrought aluminum, not alloyed (provided for in subheading 7601.10.30 or 7601.10.60) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.52 | Other unwrought products, alloyed (provided for in subheading 7601.20.30, 7601.20.60 or 7601.20.90) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.53 | Bars, rods and profiles of aluminum, not alloyed (provided for in subheading 7604.10.10, 7604.10.30 or 7604.10.50) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.54 | Hollow profiles of aluminum alloys (provided for in subheading 7604.21.00) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.55 | Bars, rods, and solid profiles, alloyed (provided for in subheading 7604.29.10, 7604.29.30 or 7604.29.50) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.56 | Wire of aluminum, of which the maximum cross-sectional dimension exceeds 7 mm (provided for in subheading 7605.11.00 or 7605.21.00) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
| 9903.85.57 | Other wire of aluminum (provided for in subheading 7605.19.00 or 7605.29.00) | The duty provided in the applicable subheading |
How the Harmonized Tariff Schedule is organized
The Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS) is the codified system U.S. Customs and Border Protection uses to assign duty rates to imported goods. It is published by the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) and updated when trade-policy actions take effect — presidential proclamations, antidumping orders, Section 301 actions, and free-trade-agreement implementations. The schedule has 22 sections, 99 chapters, and roughly 18,000 individual tariff lines. Each tariff line has a 10-digit HTS code where the first 6 digits map to the international Harmonized System (HS) maintained by the World Customs Organization, the next two digits identify the U.S. statistical heading, and the final two digits are the U.S. statistical suffix used for trade-data reporting.
Browsing tariff lines alphabetically (the letter-paged index) is one of three primary navigation paths PlainTariff offers — alongside section/chapter hierarchy and product-keyword search. Alphabetic browse is useful when the importer or researcher has a partial product name but does not know which chapter or section the product falls under. A surprising number of tariff lines are organized by common product names (apples, automobiles, batteries) rather than by industry taxonomy, so alphabetic browse often surfaces relevant lines faster than hierarchical drill-down.
Reading a tariff line page
Each tariff-line detail page shows the General (MFN) duty rate, any Special preferential rates available under free trade agreements (USMCA, GSP, CAFTA-DR, KORUS, JAPAN, etc.), and the Column 2 rate that applies to imports from non-MFN countries (currently Cuba and North Korea). Rates can be expressed as ad valorem (a percentage of customs value), specific (a dollar amount per unit of quantity), or compound (a combination of both). The detail page preserves the original rate text exactly as published by USITC and additionally extracts a numeric percentage where applicable to enable comparison and ranking.
Beyond the duty rate itself, the detail page surfaces the unit of quantity that customs uses for the line, the chapter and section it belongs to, and any additional duties that apply — antidumping (AD), countervailing (CVD), Section 201 safeguards, or Section 301 tariffs. The chapter context matters because two products with very similar descriptions can sit in different chapters with very different rates: for example, certain food products straddle the chapter boundary between agricultural commodity and prepared food, where the prepared-food chapter frequently carries 2-3x the duty rate of the raw commodity chapter.
Compliance use cases
Importers use the alphabetic browse to validate classifications a customs broker has proposed for a shipment, to find duty rates while sourcing new products, and to identify free-trade-agreement opportunities that might reduce the effective duty rate on already-imported product categories. Researchers and journalists use the browse to write about tariff incidence by product, to track which categories have been most affected by recent Section 301 actions, and to compare U.S. duty rates with rates in partner countries. Small business owners use it to estimate landed cost when evaluating whether to import directly rather than through a domestic distributor.
For binding classification determinations, always verify against the official USITC HTS site and consult a licensed customs broker. PlainTariff is an unofficial reference tool — it preserves USITC data faithfully but does not provide formal customs advice. Classification errors at the border can result in shipment delays, post-entry duty adjustments, or penalties under 19 USC 1592.
How tariff rates connect to consumer prices
Import duties feed into landed cost, which in turn feeds into wholesale and ultimately retail pricing for imported goods. The pass-through is rarely 1:1 — retailers may absorb part of the duty cost, importers may renegotiate supplier terms, and currency movements can offset or amplify the duty effect. Academic research on the 2018-2019 Section 301 tariffs found roughly 95% pass-through to U.S. wholesale prices within 6 months, with smaller and more delayed effects on retail. The implication for PlainTariff readers: an MFN duty rate increase is a real cost to importers, but the magnitude that reaches end consumers depends on competitive dynamics in the downstream supply chain.
Tariff incidence — who bears the economic cost — is technically a different question from statutory incidence (who legally pays the duty to CBP). The duty is paid by the importer of record at entry, but the economic burden can shift to exporters (via lower wholesale prices), domestic competitors (via increased market share), or consumers (via higher retail prices). Most economic studies of recent tariff actions find that the bulk of the economic incidence on consumer goods has fallen on U.S. importers and consumers rather than on foreign exporters.
Trade-program preferences worth knowing about
Beyond the standard MFN rates, several preference programs can substantially reduce or eliminate duty on qualifying imports. USMCA covers Canada and Mexico and provides duty-free treatment for goods that meet rules of origin (which can be complex — automotive, textile, and agricultural ROOs are particularly stringent). CAFTA-DR covers Central American countries and the Dominican Republic. KORUS covers Korea. JAPAN, AUSTRALIA, ISRAEL, and BAHRAIN each have bilateral FTAs with product-specific carve-outs. GSP (Generalized System of Preferences) provides duty-free entry for qualifying developing-country goods.
Each preference program has its own claim procedure — generally an importer self-certification at entry, supported by supplier documentation that the goods meet the program's rules of origin. Misclaimed preferences are a frequent source of post-entry duty assessments and penalties, so importers should consult a licensed customs broker before claiming a preference for the first time on a new product or supplier combination.